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Fox News Story Featuring David Strom: ‘Green’ Recycling Company Bankrupt Weeks After Getting Millions

From Fox News in Mankato: Fox News covered this story featuring policy fellow David Strom.


MANKATO, Minn. -

What if you could find a way to make money off other people’s trash? On top of that, you’d be helping the environment, turning that trash, in this case plastic agricultural film, into anything from outdoor decks to plastic furniture. Even better, in the midst of a recession, the company becomes an oasis of employment and economic development.

Genesis Poly Recycling was supposed to do all of that. Taking old silage bags and hay wraps and turning them into plastic pellets to be sold to other companies. But it never got off the ground, and is currently bankrupt… but not before taking millions of dollars in taxpayer money.

Two years ago, Genesis Poly CEO Dan Hauschild said, “We’ll be creating quite a few jobs. 30 to 40 right away and in a couple years be around 120… and then there’s more opportunity to expand we’ll go way beyond that in the next five years.”

Hearing those numbers, Mankato was happy to oblige. The city pulled out plenty of stops… acting as an intermediary of sorts, by purchasing the property at 480 North Industrial Road for $850,000, money acquired through a grant with the state’s Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED). The old Spartech site would be rented out to Genesis Poly. Along with the site purchase, Mankato lent Genesis Poly half a million dollars for equipment.

That $500,000 was stimulus money given to DEED, and applied for by the city of Mankato. Once paid back, the city could lend it out to another company. At least that was the plan.
Reality however, begged to differ.

Mankato City Councilman Mike Laven says, “I don’t think anyone of us saw a 2-month window and that closing. That wasn’t our process.”

In the spring of 2010, Genesis Poly went belly up. And with it went Mankato’s money. Along with a $100,000 loan from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, and another $7.44 million through a loan with U.S. Bank… 70% of which was backed by the Department of Agriculture.

Genesis Poly was in talks with the Minnesota USDA well before they went to U.S. Bank, and small government advocates are saying the USDA’s involvement could have played a role in U.S. Bank’s willingness to throw money at Genesis Poly.

David Strom, a policy fellow at the Minnesota Free Market Institute says, “There’s an implicit sense of Too Big To Fail. If the government is in, they’re going to keep throwing money at it. It looks like a less risky way to spend your money. You don’t even have to look at the books, ’cause it doesn’t matter. Government is going to back you up.”

But perhaps the most disappointing aspect of this whole story: this isn’t the first time Genesis Poly has gone bankrupt.

Back in 2008, with the same idea and the same investors, AGSI Recycling, as it was called, out of Savage, disintegrated as well, costing another $57,000 for the MPCA, and taking the 8 million pounds of plastic they had collected for production and dumping it all in a landfill.

Strom says, “This company in particular had already gone out of business once. The business model didn’t work. Yes they could produce something that was useful, but not at a price that anyone was willing to pay. If government has to shove money in, you’re burning up that kind of green to create another kind of green coming out the other side. And it just doesn’t make sense.”

U.S. Bank refused to comment on the story, citing the ongoing litigation in the matter - a multi-party lawsuit currently making its way through Blue Earth County Court, with the City of Mankato, the MPCA and U.S. Bank suing Genesis Poly and a separate investor, Crown Machine.
The case is currently in the discovery phase, with the first court date set for February 7th of next year.

The Solyndra - Walmart Connection By Paul Chesser — National Legal & Policy Center blog

A lot has been said about the ties of George Kaiser, a campaign contribution bundler for President Obama’s 2008 campaign, to the Solyndra bankruptcy scandal that likely has cost taxpayers $535 millionthanks to a Department of Energy loan guarantee. Kaiser’s investment firm, Argonaut Venture Capital, held over 35 percent of the failed solar company’s stock – more than anyone else.

But next in line (with 11 percent) behind Argonaut in the Solyndra stakes is Madrone Capital Partners, which is managed by a trio whom the political Left has attempted to tie to support for Republicans. Of course, “they did it too” is not a legitimate defense, but in this case, it’s not a portrayal of the entire picture either.

Madrone is tied to the Walton family – of Walmart fame – and is co-managed by an in-law, Gregory Penner, who also serves as a Walmart director. He is the son-in-law of S. Robson “Rob” Walton, married to his daughter Carrie. Rob, Walmart Stores’ chairman of the board, is one of founder Sam Walton’s sons. Madrone’s other partners are listed as Jameson “Jamie” McJunkin and Thomas Patterson, and McJunkin is also a director for Solyndra.

Walmart can no longer be portrayed as a “conservative” or “Republican” company. Beginning under former CEO Lee Scott, and accelerating under present CEO Mike Duke, Walmart has become a powerful backer of a host of left-wing causes. This shift is detailed in an NLPC Special Report titledWal-Mart Embraces Controversial Causes: Bid to Appease Liberal Interest Groups Will Likely Fail, Hurt Business.

Madrone Capital is based in Menlo Park, Calif., about a 30-minute drive across Dumbarton Bridge over San Francisco Bay from Fremont, where Solyndra is based. According to a company that produces inverters for solar power – Enphase Energy, where McJunkin also serves as a director– Madrone “invests on behalf of members of the Walton Family with a long-term, patient capital approach,” and McJunkin “leads Madrone’s efforts in sustainability and alternative energy.” While it can’t be known for certain how much of Madrone’s funds come from the Waltons, the fact that McJunkin allows his Enphase bio to cite them specifically as their source indicates it is likely a hefty percentage, if not all of it.

So Madrone, and therefore the Waltons, had a healthy stake in Solyndra – second only to Kaiser. But like most wise investment firms, their interests are diversified to reduce risk and spread the opportunity for success. For example, Madrone is also invested in MicroSeismic, Inc., which provides services for the natural gas and oil shale hydraulic fracturing industries. Similarly Kaiser, the Obama campaign bundler, is an oilman and banker, but also apparently had a desire to bring Solyndra jobs to his hometown of Tulsa, Okla. He has visited the White House 16 times since 2009, Businessweek reports.

That’s quite a bit more passion for Solyndra than Madrone and the Waltons have shown, although it’s not out of the realm of possibility that they, too, may have made a pitch through other channels on the failed solar company’s behalf. After all, as has been reported repeatedly by NLPC, the Walton family – while yes, often supporting Republican candidates and particularly passionate about the school choice issue – has also thrown considerable money into environmental causes. Even more significant, Walmart incessantly boasts of its commitments to “sustainability,” cap-and-trade, and even ObamaCare. Press releasesabout new solar panels installed at the company’s stores are issued regularly. Walmart’s reputation for environmental activism became so great that the company is now the subject of a fawning book titled Force of Nature, The Unlikely Story of Walmart’s Green Revolution: How It Could Transform Business and Save the World, about their allegedly conservationist practices, despite eight consecutive quarters of same-store sales declines.

And tying the Waltons, and Madrone Capital, exclusively to the back pockets of Republicans would be incorrect also. After all, they brought liberal former Al Gore aide Leslie Dach into a key executive role with Walmart, and he’s often out front on the company’s sustainability initiatives. And while GOP candidates have enjoyed support from some Waltons and Madrone partners, more recently their money has been thrown Democrats’ way also.

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, Madrone’s Greg Penner and his wife Carrie – the daughter of Walmart chairman of the board Rob Walton – most recently gave $7,200 to the successful U.S. Senate campaign of Democrat Michael Bennet, from Colorado. Mrs. Penner also donated $2,300 to President Obama’s 2008 campaign, and Greg Penner gave $500 to U.S. Rep. Joe Baca, also a Democrat. The Penners also contributed $3,600 to Georgia Republican Saxby Chambliss’s 2008 Senate campaign, and Mrs. Penner gave $2,400 to the unsuccessful Senate candidacy of California Republican Tom Campbell. As for Madrone’s other partners, McJunkin has no records of political donations, and Thomas Patterson has made five contributions totaling $8,900 to U.S. Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., who apparently is a buddy from their days together on the Harvard University lightweight crew team.

Donations from Walmart Stores’ Political Action Committee, since 2008, have been fairly balanced between Democrats ($1.285 million) and Republicans ($1.268 million), according to CRP records.

Regardless of political interests, the Republicans on the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, under the Energy and Commerce Committee, want to know what McJunkin and Madrone knew and when they knew it with regard to Solyndra. Madrone and Kaiser’s Argonaut Capital reportedly infused the solar company with $75 million in credit to enhance its liquidity for the purposes of helping with its Department of Energy loan. That money is apparently recoverable by the creditors before taxpayers can see any possible payback from the $535 million government loan.

“Green” pork and ill-advised “renewable” investments have been embraced by both political parties, and many of the Waltons have shown their willingness to throw away many of their billions of dollars on such schemes. But they alone should be stuck with the successes and failures, and leave the taxpayers out of it. Companies like Walmart should pay market price out of their own coffers for solar initiatives, without the benefit of tax breaks intended for special interests. How many times does government have to demonstrate the failure of its market interventions before politicians get the idea they should hang it up?

At the Walmart annual meeting in June, NLPC sponsored a shareholder proposal on Walmart’s lobbying priorities. During his remarks, NLPC President Peter Flaherty criticized the company’s embrace of alternative energy:

Walmart is in the grip of political ideologues. On its website it says that its goal is to be supplied 100 percent by renewable energy, which is neither achievable nor desirable. This goal is revealing, however, about the philosophical orientation of the people behind it. They seem bothered by capitalism, progress, technology and the 21st century itself.

Wind generates two tenths of one percent of the world’s energy. It cannot compete with fossil fuels. Same for solar. These industries exist ONLY because of government subsidies, which in the coming years will be phased out as governments run out of money. It is already happening in Europe. Trust me, Walmart is never going to be 100% supplied by renewable energy.

Walmart pushes weird products like the compact fluorescent lights in the name of fighting global warming. These bulbs throw off a harsh light, and are big problem if you break them because they contain mercury. Consumers did not ask for them.

Walmart announced plans to eliminate millions of tons of carbon emissions from its global supply chain by the end of 2015, thus imposing its political agenda on its suppliers. Leslie Dach’s friends used to complain that Walmart was too big and powerful because it could dictate to its suppliers. I guess that it is OK now that this power is being put to THEIR political ends.

Paul Chesser is an associate fellow for the National Legal and Policy Center and is executive director of American Tradition Institute.

 

A Quiet Revolution: Oil Security is Within Our Grasp by Bill Glahn

Just when it seems that all the news is bad, a ray a light peeks through the clouds. Our dependence on foreign oil, a bugaboo for Presidents dating back to Nixon, has finally begun to recede. And the biggest reason can be found next door inNorth Dakota.

 

As with the natural gas revolution of recent years, the latest oil boom is powered by new drilling techniques, most notably the use of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking.”

 

The U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Informational Administration (EIA) reports that the share of imported oil fell below 50 percent in 2010, the first time imports represented less than half the total since 1999. (Canada is our number one foreign supplier, withSaudi Arabia andMexico alternating in second and third place.)

 

Our foreign oil dependence peaked in 2005 above 60 percent. The decline in imports can be attributed to a decline in consumption, related to the economic recession, and an increase in production, with North Dakotabeing the fastest growing state. The EIA reports that North Dakota ranks fourth, behind only Texas, Alaska, and California in oil production. Production levels in North Dakota are double their 2008 levels. The Wall Street Journal reports that, if current trends hold,North Dakota will move into the number two spot, afterTexas, by the end of the decade.

 

It may surprise some to learn that the U.S.is the world’s third largest oil producer, after Saudi Arabiaand Russia. It will surprise even more to hear that there are published reports that investment bank Goldman Sachs believes the U.S. has the potential to become the number one oil-producing country in the world, as early as 2017.

 

This story, from National Public Radio, describes the oil boom in North Dakota and gives one a feel for the jobs and economic development produced by domestic oil production. The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, estimates that by shifting federal policy on oil drilling we could create an additional 1 million jobs inAmerica.

 

Other advanced nations likeCanada(world no. 6),Norway(world no. 13), and theU.K.(world no. 19) don’t seem squeamish about developing their natural resources. Neither should we.

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